Shepard & Dark

Plot Summary:

Sam Shepard and Johnny Dark met in Greenwich Village in the early 1960s and, despite leading very different lives, remained close friends ever since. Shepard became a Pulitzer Prize winning playwright ("Buried Child") and an Academy Award-nominated actor ("The Right Stuff"), while Dark was a homebody with a penchant for letter writing, photography, and supporting himself with odd jobs from dog-catcher to deli worker. Through the decades, they stayed bonded by family ties. Dark married an older woman named Scarlett and Shepard married her daughter. For years, the two couples lived together, until Shepard broke away for a relationship with Jessica Lange in 1983, leaving Johnny to help father his first son. Nevertheless, he and Dark continued writing to each other, amassing hundreds of letters.
Director Treva Wurmfeld began filming the two friends in 2010 during a period of transition and reflection for Shepard. At the time, Shepard had quietly ended his relationship with Lange and accepted a proposal to publish his correspondence with Dark. The task required them to meet and sift through years of their shared history, stirring memories both good and bad. Wurmfeld observes the two men, separately and together, over a period of 18 months and captures an indelible portrait of a complex friendship. On the surface, they are like jovial siblings, having laughs at each other's expense, but as they trace back four decades of experience, they tap into deeper subjects of love, duty, fatherhood, illness, grief, passion, money, art, freedom and isolation.
Shepard has an avowed aversion to writing a memoir and prefers letting his work speak for itself. Yet with rare intimacy and access to a rich archive of photographs and old family movies, Wurmfeld manages to unveil the past in a way that both speaks to Shepard's work as well as his current state of mind. Shepard has always had an arresting screen presence from his first appearance in Terrence Malick's "Days of Heaven" to his latest work in Jeff Nichols' "Mud." He's equally compelling in the role of himself and well-matched playing opposite the screen debut of Johnny Dark.